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Troubling Space: Dispersal of Place in The Sun Also Rises and The Garden of Eden

The Sun Also Rises (1926) and The Garden of Eden (1986) contain a large number of place names, particularly European ones. This essay examines Hemingway's use of place names as a poetic strategy that forms part of an inquiry into the meaning of space and place. While place names appear to be st...

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Published in:The Hemingway review 2018-03, Vol.37 (2), p.6
Main Author: Kack, Elin
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Language:English
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description The Sun Also Rises (1926) and The Garden of Eden (1986) contain a large number of place names, particularly European ones. This essay examines Hemingway's use of place names as a poetic strategy that forms part of an inquiry into the meaning of space and place. While place names appear to be stable referents denoting specific geographical locations, the background of war underscores the arbitrariness involved in borders, place, and location. Hemingway's novels challenge the view of place names as stable referents and demonstrate the crucial role played by artistic representation in the creation of place.
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1548-4815
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source EBSCOhost MLA International Bibliography With Full Text; Project Muse:Jisc Collections:Project MUSE Journals Agreement 2024:Premium Collection; ProQuest One Literature
subjects Analysis
Criticism and interpretation
Hemingway, Ernest
Novelists
Poetic techniques
Poetics
Setting (Literature)
Works
title Troubling Space: Dispersal of Place in The Sun Also Rises and The Garden of Eden
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